I first e-mailed Jake about my idea just to see if I was way-out in left field on this... not wanting to look overly ignorant.
This is what I asked:
"I was just reading through all the postings about padded weapons. I was wondering what would happen if you make a the wooden slat version but adhered a thin layer of fiberglass cloth like they use to repair cars. It might give it the strength not to break as easy while being only a light weight addition to weapon. I was also wondering if the padding is glued down or is it just being taped around the wood? If glued wouldn't it reduce some of the internal trauma to the foam because the foam wouldn't be impacted by both the external force (i.e. sword on body of opponent) as well as the wooden slat inside. Wouldn't the glue also add another layer of strength?
If automotive fiberglass it too expensive there are fiberglass carpet tapes that are designed for heavy impact and wear. Has anyone tried any combination of wood with fiberglass cloth?"
One flaw I can already see is in my idea is... if the padding is glued to the wood than it can not be easily removed when damaged even if it does last longer.
So I was wondering what all you padded weapon engineers thought about the fiberglass cloth idea. As I understand it there is a need for a weapon rigid enough not to whip, durable enough not to break easily, yet soft enough not to break bones.
I'm an artist not an engineer but it seems that you either soften the hard materials or strengthen the weak ones without making them break bones.
When engineering crash barriers for roads the use a layer of a crushable material (i.e. barrels) to slow the impact of the car hitting a bridge support. What on the padded weapon does this other than the foam? What can be inserted on the cutting edges between the ridged wood and the soft foam... Rubber tubing might be an option, the type they use in the medical field or the type used in plumbing a kitchen sink for the hand held sprayer (it has fiberglass thread reinforcement in it)... just brainstorming a bit...
Is there any health/ safty issues with this idea?
I will continue to work on this idea. Is there anyone out there familiar with autobody products? What about products in the construction field or airplane construction materials. Does any of this sound plausible enough to test or would I be wasting time & money?
I'm used to walking into hardware stores and seeing things for a different purpose so it isn't a giant step for me to ask the same about other supplies and materials.

